// Copyright 2012 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license // , at your // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed // except according to those terms. //! Support for fmt! expressions. //! //! The syntax is close to that of Posix format strings: //! //! ~~~~~~ //! Format := '%' Parameter? Flag* Width? Precision? Type //! Parameter := [0-9]+ '$' //! Flag := [ 0#+-] //! Width := Parameter | [0-9]+ //! Precision := '.' [0-9]+ //! Type := [bcdfiostuxX?] //! ~~~~~~ //! //! * Parameter is the 1-based argument to apply the format to. Currently not //! implemented. //! * Flag 0 causes leading zeros to be used for padding when converting //! numbers. //! * Flag # causes the conversion to be done in an *alternative* manner. //! Currently not implemented. //! * Flag + causes signed numbers to always be prepended with a sign //! character. //! * Flag - left justifies the result //! * Width specifies the minimum field width of the result. By default //! leading spaces are added. //! * Precision specifies the minimum number of digits for integral types //! and the minimum number //! of decimal places for float. //! //! The types currently supported are: //! //! * b - bool //! * c - char //! * d - int //! * f - float //! * i - int (same as d) //! * o - uint as octal //! * t - uint as binary //! * u - uint //! * x - uint as lower-case hexadecimal //! * X - uint as upper-case hexadecimal //! * s - str (any flavor) //! * ? - arbitrary type (does not use the to_str trait) // NB: transitionary, de-mode-ing. #[forbid(deprecated_mode)]; #[forbid(deprecated_pattern)]; /* Syntax Extension: fmt Format a string The 'fmt' extension is modeled on the posix printf system. A posix conversion ostensibly looks like this > %~[parameter]~[flags]~[width]~[.precision]~[length]type Given the different numeric type bestiary we have, we omit the 'length' parameter and support slightly different conversions for 'type' > %~[parameter]~[flags]~[width]~[.precision]type we also only support translating-to-rust a tiny subset of the possible combinations at the moment. Example: debug!("hello, %s!", "world"); */ use cmp::Eq; use option::{Some, None}; /* * We have a 'ct' (compile-time) module that parses format strings into a * sequence of conversions. From those conversions AST fragments are built * that call into properly-typed functions in the 'rt' (run-time) module. * Each of those run-time conversion functions accepts another conversion * description that specifies how to format its output. * * The building of the AST is currently done in a module inside the compiler, * but should migrate over here as the plugin interface is defined. */ // Functions used by the fmt extension at compile time #[doc(hidden)] pub mod ct { pub enum Signedness { Signed, Unsigned, } pub enum Caseness { CaseUpper, CaseLower, } pub enum Ty { TyBool, TyStr, TyChar, TyInt(Signedness), TyBits, TyHex(Caseness), TyOctal, TyFloat, TyPoly, } pub enum Flag { FlagLeftJustify, FlagLeftZeroPad, FlagSpaceForSign, FlagSignAlways, FlagAlternate, } pub enum Count { CountIs(uint), CountIsParam(uint), CountIsNextParam, CountImplied, } // A formatted conversion from an expression to a string pub type Conv = {param: Option, flags: ~[Flag], width: Count, precision: Count, ty: Ty}; // A fragment of the output sequence pub enum Piece { PieceString(~str), PieceConv(Conv), } pub type ErrorFn = fn@(&str) -> ! ; pub fn parse_fmt_string(s: &str, err: ErrorFn) -> ~[Piece] { let mut pieces: ~[Piece] = ~[]; let lim = str::len(s); let mut buf = ~""; fn flush_buf(buf: ~str, pieces: &mut ~[Piece]) -> ~str { if buf.len() > 0 { let piece = PieceString(move buf); pieces.push(move piece); } return ~""; } let mut i = 0; while i < lim { let size = str::utf8_char_width(s[i]); let curr = str::slice(s, i, i+size); if curr == ~"%" { i += 1; if i >= lim { err(~"unterminated conversion at end of string"); } let curr2 = str::slice(s, i, i+1); if curr2 == ~"%" { buf += curr2; i += 1; } else { buf = flush_buf(move buf, &mut pieces); let rs = parse_conversion(s, i, lim, err); pieces.push(copy rs.piece); i = rs.next; } } else { buf += curr; i += size; } } flush_buf(move buf, &mut pieces); move pieces } pub fn peek_num(s: &str, i: uint, lim: uint) -> Option<{num: uint, next: uint}> { let mut j = i; let mut accum = 0u; let mut found = false; while j < lim { match char::to_digit(s[j] as char, 10) { Some(x) => { found = true; accum *= 10; accum += x; j += 1; }, None => break } } if found { Some({num: accum, next: j}) } else { None } } pub fn parse_conversion(s: &str, i: uint, lim: uint, err: ErrorFn) -> {piece: Piece, next: uint} { let parm = parse_parameter(s, i, lim); let flags = parse_flags(s, parm.next, lim); let width = parse_count(s, flags.next, lim); let prec = parse_precision(s, width.next, lim); let ty = parse_type(s, prec.next, lim, err); return {piece: PieceConv({param: parm.param, flags: copy flags.flags, width: width.count, precision: prec.count, ty: ty.ty}), next: ty.next}; } pub fn parse_parameter(s: &str, i: uint, lim: uint) -> {param: Option, next: uint} { if i >= lim { return {param: None, next: i}; } let num = peek_num(s, i, lim); return match num { None => {param: None, next: i}, Some(t) => { let n = t.num; let j = t.next; if j < lim && s[j] == '$' as u8 { {param: Some(n), next: j + 1} } else { {param: None, next: i} } } }; } pub fn parse_flags(s: &str, i: uint, lim: uint) -> {flags: ~[Flag], next: uint} { let noflags: ~[Flag] = ~[]; if i >= lim { return {flags: move noflags, next: i}; } fn more(f: Flag, s: &str, i: uint, lim: uint) -> {flags: ~[Flag], next: uint} { let next = parse_flags(s, i + 1u, lim); let rest = copy next.flags; let j = next.next; let curr: ~[Flag] = ~[f]; return {flags: vec::append(move curr, rest), next: j}; } // Unfortunate, but because s is borrowed, can't use a closure // fn more(f: Flag, s: &str) { more_(f, s, i, lim); } let f = s[i]; return if f == '-' as u8 { more(FlagLeftJustify, s, i, lim) } else if f == '0' as u8 { more(FlagLeftZeroPad, s, i, lim) } else if f == ' ' as u8 { more(FlagSpaceForSign, s, i, lim) } else if f == '+' as u8 { more(FlagSignAlways, s, i, lim) } else if f == '#' as u8 { more(FlagAlternate, s, i, lim) } else { {flags: move noflags, next: i} }; } pub fn parse_count(s: &str, i: uint, lim: uint) -> {count: Count, next: uint} { return if i >= lim { {count: CountImplied, next: i} } else if s[i] == '*' as u8 { let param = parse_parameter(s, i + 1, lim); let j = param.next; match param.param { None => {count: CountIsNextParam, next: j}, Some(n) => {count: CountIsParam(n), next: j} } } else { let num = peek_num(s, i, lim); match num { None => {count: CountImplied, next: i}, Some(num) => { count: CountIs(num.num), next: num.next } } }; } pub fn parse_precision(s: &str, i: uint, lim: uint) -> {count: Count, next: uint} { return if i >= lim { {count: CountImplied, next: i} } else if s[i] == '.' as u8 { let count = parse_count(s, i + 1u, lim); // If there were no digits specified, i.e. the precision // was ".", then the precision is 0 match count.count { CountImplied => {count: CountIs(0), next: count.next}, _ => count } } else { {count: CountImplied, next: i} }; } pub fn parse_type(s: &str, i: uint, lim: uint, err: ErrorFn) -> {ty: Ty, next: uint} { if i >= lim { err(~"missing type in conversion"); } let tstr = str::slice(s, i, i+1u); // FIXME (#2249): Do we really want two signed types here? // How important is it to be printf compatible? let t = if tstr == ~"b" { TyBool } else if tstr == ~"s" { TyStr } else if tstr == ~"c" { TyChar } else if tstr == ~"d" || tstr == ~"i" { TyInt(Signed) } else if tstr == ~"u" { TyInt(Unsigned) } else if tstr == ~"x" { TyHex(CaseLower) } else if tstr == ~"X" { TyHex(CaseUpper) } else if tstr == ~"t" { TyBits } else if tstr == ~"o" { TyOctal } else if tstr == ~"f" { TyFloat } else if tstr == ~"?" { TyPoly } else { err(~"unknown type in conversion: " + tstr) }; return {ty: t, next: i + 1u}; } } // Functions used by the fmt extension at runtime. For now there are a lot of // decisions made a runtime. If it proves worthwhile then some of these // conditions can be evaluated at compile-time. For now though it's cleaner to // implement it 0this way, I think. #[doc(hidden)] pub mod rt { pub const flag_none : u32 = 0u32; pub const flag_left_justify : u32 = 0b00000000000001u32; pub const flag_left_zero_pad : u32 = 0b00000000000010u32; pub const flag_space_for_sign : u32 = 0b00000000000100u32; pub const flag_sign_always : u32 = 0b00000000001000u32; pub const flag_alternate : u32 = 0b00000000010000u32; pub enum Count { CountIs(uint), CountImplied, } pub enum Ty { TyDefault, TyBits, TyHexUpper, TyHexLower, TyOctal, } pub type Conv = {flags: u32, width: Count, precision: Count, ty: Ty}; pub pure fn conv_int(cv: Conv, i: int) -> ~str { let radix = 10; let prec = get_int_precision(cv); let mut s : ~str = int_to_str_prec(i, radix, prec); if 0 <= i { if have_flag(cv.flags, flag_sign_always) { unsafe { str::unshift_char(&mut s, '+') }; } else if have_flag(cv.flags, flag_space_for_sign) { unsafe { str::unshift_char(&mut s, ' ') }; } } return unsafe { pad(cv, move s, PadSigned) }; } pub pure fn conv_uint(cv: Conv, u: uint) -> ~str { let prec = get_int_precision(cv); let mut rs = match cv.ty { TyDefault => uint_to_str_prec(u, 10, prec), TyHexLower => uint_to_str_prec(u, 16, prec), TyHexUpper => str::to_upper(uint_to_str_prec(u, 16, prec)), TyBits => uint_to_str_prec(u, 2, prec), TyOctal => uint_to_str_prec(u, 8, prec) }; return unsafe { pad(cv, move rs, PadUnsigned) }; } pub pure fn conv_bool(cv: Conv, b: bool) -> ~str { let s = if b { ~"true" } else { ~"false" }; // run the boolean conversion through the string conversion logic, // giving it the same rules for precision, etc. return conv_str(cv, s); } pub pure fn conv_char(cv: Conv, c: char) -> ~str { let mut s = str::from_char(c); return unsafe { pad(cv, move s, PadNozero) }; } pub pure fn conv_str(cv: Conv, s: &str) -> ~str { // For strings, precision is the maximum characters // displayed let mut unpadded = match cv.precision { CountImplied => s.to_owned(), CountIs(max) => if max as uint < str::char_len(s) { str::substr(s, 0, max as uint) } else { s.to_owned() } }; return unsafe { pad(cv, move unpadded, PadNozero) }; } pub pure fn conv_float(cv: Conv, f: float) -> ~str { let (to_str, digits) = match cv.precision { CountIs(c) => (float::to_str_exact, c as uint), CountImplied => (float::to_str, 6u) }; let mut s = unsafe { to_str(f, digits) }; if 0.0 <= f { if have_flag(cv.flags, flag_sign_always) { s = ~"+" + s; } else if have_flag(cv.flags, flag_space_for_sign) { s = ~" " + s; } } return unsafe { pad(cv, move s, PadFloat) }; } pub pure fn conv_poly(cv: Conv, v: &T) -> ~str { let s = sys::log_str(v); return conv_str(cv, s); } // Convert an int to string with minimum number of digits. If precision is // 0 and num is 0 then the result is the empty string. pub pure fn int_to_str_prec(num: int, radix: uint, prec: uint) -> ~str { return if num < 0 { ~"-" + uint_to_str_prec(-num as uint, radix, prec) } else { uint_to_str_prec(num as uint, radix, prec) }; } // Convert a uint to string with a minimum number of digits. If precision // is 0 and num is 0 then the result is the empty string. Could move this // to uint: but it doesn't seem all that useful. pub pure fn uint_to_str_prec(num: uint, radix: uint, prec: uint) -> ~str { return if prec == 0u && num == 0u { ~"" } else { let s = uint::to_str(num, radix); let len = str::char_len(s); if len < prec { let diff = prec - len; let pad = str::from_chars(vec::from_elem(diff, '0')); pad + s } else { move s } }; } pub pure fn get_int_precision(cv: Conv) -> uint { return match cv.precision { CountIs(c) => c as uint, CountImplied => 1u }; } pub enum PadMode { PadSigned, PadUnsigned, PadNozero, PadFloat } pub impl PadMode : Eq { pure fn eq(&self, other: &PadMode) -> bool { match ((*self), (*other)) { (PadSigned, PadSigned) => true, (PadUnsigned, PadUnsigned) => true, (PadNozero, PadNozero) => true, (PadFloat, PadFloat) => true, (PadSigned, _) => false, (PadUnsigned, _) => false, (PadNozero, _) => false, (PadFloat, _) => false } } pure fn ne(&self, other: &PadMode) -> bool { !(*self).eq(other) } } pub fn pad(cv: Conv, s: ~str, mode: PadMode) -> ~str { let mut s = move s; // sadtimes let uwidth : uint = match cv.width { CountImplied => return (move s), CountIs(width) => { width as uint } }; let strlen = str::char_len(s); if uwidth <= strlen { return (move s); } let mut padchar = ' '; let diff = uwidth - strlen; if have_flag(cv.flags, flag_left_justify) { let padstr = str::from_chars(vec::from_elem(diff, padchar)); return s + padstr; } let {might_zero_pad, signed} = match mode { PadNozero => {might_zero_pad:false, signed:false}, PadSigned => {might_zero_pad:true, signed:true }, PadFloat => {might_zero_pad:true, signed:true}, PadUnsigned => {might_zero_pad:true, signed:false} }; pure fn have_precision(cv: Conv) -> bool { return match cv.precision { CountImplied => false, _ => true }; } let zero_padding = { if might_zero_pad && have_flag(cv.flags, flag_left_zero_pad) && (!have_precision(cv) || mode == PadFloat) { padchar = '0'; true } else { false } }; let padstr = str::from_chars(vec::from_elem(diff, padchar)); // This is completely heinous. If we have a signed value then // potentially rip apart the intermediate result and insert some // zeros. It may make sense to convert zero padding to a precision // instead. if signed && zero_padding && s.len() > 0 { let head = str::shift_char(&mut s); if head == '+' || head == '-' || head == ' ' { let headstr = str::from_chars(vec::from_elem(1u, head)); return headstr + padstr + s; } else { str::unshift_char(&mut s, head); } } return padstr + s; } pub pure fn have_flag(flags: u32, f: u32) -> bool { flags & f != 0 } } // Bulk of the tests are in src/test/run-pass/syntax-extension-fmt.rs #[cfg(test)] mod test { #[test] fn fmt_slice() { let s = "abc"; let _s = fmt!("%s", s); } } // Local Variables: // mode: rust; // fill-column: 78; // indent-tabs-mode: nil // c-basic-offset: 4 // buffer-file-coding-system: utf-8-unix // End: